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Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory 2017-02
CVE-2017-5375: Excessive JIT code allocation allows bypass of ASLR and DEP
JIT code allocation can allow for a bypass of ASLR and DEP protections leading to potential memory corruption attacks.
Impact: Critical
CVE-2017-5376: Use-after-free in XSL
Use-after-free while manipulating XSL in XSLT documents
Impact: Critical
CVE-2017-5378: Pointer and frame data leakage of Javascript objects
Hashed codes of JavaScript objects are shared between pages. This allows for pointer leaks because an object’s address can be discovered through hash codes, and also allows for data leakage of an object’s content using these hash codes.
Impact: High
CVE-2017-5380: Potential use-after-free during DOM manipulations
A potential use-after-free found through fuzzing during DOM manipulation of SVG content.
Impact: High
CVE-2017-5390: Insecure communication methods in Developer Tools JSON viewer
The JSON viewer in the Developer Tools uses insecure methods to create a communication channel for copying and viewing JSON or HTTP headers data, allowing for potential privilege escalation.
Impact: High
CVE-2017-5396: Use-after-free with Media Decoder
A use-after-free vulnerability in the Media Decoder when working with media files when some events are fired after the media elements are freed from memory.
Impact: High
CVE-2017-5383: Location bar spoofing with unicode characters
URLs containing certain unicode glyphs for alternative hyphens and quotes do not properly trigger punycode display, allowing for domain name spoofing attacks in the location bar.
Impact: Moderate
CVE-2017-5386: WebExtensions can use data: protocol to affect other extensions
WebExtension scripts can use the data: protocol to affect pages loaded by other web extensions using this protocol, leading to potential data disclosure or privilege escalation in affected extensions.
Impact: Moderate
CVE-2017-5373: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 51 and Firefox ESR 45.7
Mozilla developers and community members Christian Holler, Gary Kwong, André Bargull, Jan de Mooij, Tom Schuster, and Oriol reported memory safety bugs present in Firefox 50.1 and Firefox ESR 45.6. Some of these bugs showed evidence of memory corruption and we presume that with enough effort that some of these could be exploited to run arbitrary code.
Impact: Critical
Reproducible: Always